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"Heigh-Ho" is a song from Walt Disney's 1937 animated film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, written by Frank Churchill (music) and Larry Morey (lyrics). It is sung by the group of Seven Dwarfs as they work at a mine with diamonds and rubies, and is one of the best-known songs in the film.
The Danish Tolkien Ensemble has set all the songs in Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings to music.. The music of Middle-earth consists of the music mentioned by J. R. R. Tolkien in his Middle-earth books, the music written by other artists to accompany performances of his work, whether individual songs or adaptations of his books for theatre, film, radio, and games, and music more generally ...
With the Dwarves, he has written and produced nearly a dozen studio records over a span of over 30 years. He has produced albums by Mondo Generator, [6] Dwarves, [7] F.Y.P, Jon Cougar Concentration Camp, Swingin' Utters, and The God Awfuls. [8] He also released solo material as Blag Dahlia and under one of his other aliases, Earl Lee Grace.
The Dwarves are an American punk rock band formed in Chicago, Illinois and based in San Francisco, California as of 2009. [ 2 ] Formed as a garage punk band under the name Suburban Nightmare, their career subsequently saw them move in a hardcore direction before settling into an eclectic punk rock sound emphasizing intentionally shocking lyrics.
The full score was nominated at the 11th Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards, [19] and "Song of the Lonely Mountain" received a nomination for the Houston Film Critics Society Awards. [20] In 2013, the score for An Unexpected Journey ranked ninth out of one hundred in Classic FM's top film scores. The album charted in several ...
Tolkien emphasizes the rhythm in the song "Under the Mountain dark and tall" by the repeated use of the same syntactic construction; this would, they wrote, be seen as monotonous in a poem, but in a song it gives the effect of reciting and singing, in this case as Thorin Oakenshield's Dwarves prepare for battle in their mountain hall: [27]
The Elves are immortal, while other races like the Dwarves and the Ents are long-lived. There is, as Nelson states, "a complex system of otherworlds and eternal dwellings" for when members of the various races leave Middle-earth. And the One Ring tempts and corrupts partly through its promise of immortality. [5]
This version of the song has been likened to Nick Bottom's dream in William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, which speaks of something that "the eye of man hath not heard, the eye of man hath not seen". [3] Ralph C. Wood writes that from a Christian point of view, the song references the inevitable journey towards death and beyond. [5]